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Free-trade zone

A free-trade zone (FTZ) is a class of special economic zone.[1][2] It is a geographic area where goods may be imported, stored, handled, manufactured, or reconfigured and re-exported under specific customs regulation and generally not subject to customs duty. Free trade zones are generally organized around major seaports, international airports, and national frontiers—areas with many geographic advantages for trade.[3]

Definition edit

The World Bank defines free trade zones as "small, fenced-in, duty-free areas, offering warehousing, storage, and distribution facilities for trade, transshipment, and re-export operations".[4] Free-trade zones can also be defined as labor-intensive manufacturing centers that involve the import of raw materials or components and the export of factory products, but this is a dated definition as more and more free-trade zones focus on service industries such as software, back-office operations, research, and financial services.

Synonyms edit

Free-trade zones are referred to as "foreign-trade zones" in the United States (Foreign Trade Zones Act of 1934),[5] where FTZs provide customs-related advantages as well as exemptions from state and local inventory taxes. In other countries, they have been called "duty-free export processing zones," "export-free zones," "export processing zones," "free export zones," "free zones," "industrial free zones," "investment promotion zones," "maquiladoras," and "special economic zones".[5][6] Some were previously called "free ports". Free zones range from specific-purpose manufacturing facilities to areas where legal systems and economic regulation vary from the normal provisions of the country concerned.

Free zones may reduce taxes, customs duties, and regulatory requirements for registration of business. Zones around the world often provide special exemptions from normal immigration procedures and foreign investment restrictions as well as other features. Free zones are intended to foster economic activity and employment that could occur elsewhere.[7]

Export-processing zone edit

An export-processing zone (EPZ) is a specific type of FTZ usually set up in developing countries by their governments to promote industrial and commercial exports. According to the World Bank, "an export processing zone is an industrial estate, usually a fenced-in area of 10 to 300 hectares, that specializes in manufacturing for export. It offers firms free trade conditions and a liberal regulatory environment. Its objectives are to attract foreign investors, collaborators, and buyers who can facilitate entry into the world market for some of the economy's industrial goods, thus generating employment and foreign exchange".[8] Most FTZs are located in developing countries; Brazil, Colombia, India, Indonesia, El Salvador, China, the Philippines, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Pakistan, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala, Kenya, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, and Madagascar all have EPZ programs.[9] In 1997, 93 countries had set up export processing zones, employing 22.5 million people, and five years later, in 2003, EPZs in 116 countries employed 43 million people.[9]

Brazil edit

In Brazil, 25 Export-Processing Zones have been authorized in 17 states, and 19 of them have been implemented.[10] Brazilian government launched the first Export processing zones in 1988, aiming to fight the unbalances in the country.[11] First EPZ area in operation was located near of the Port of Pecém in Ceará.[11] Companies in these areas are benefited from tax exemptions and incentives at the ICMS Tax (State Value-Added Tax). Some Brazilian states offer other regional incentives.[12] Companies also can take advantage of a Foreign exchange treatment supported by the law that created the EPZ and proximity of Custom authorities with offices inside the EPZ.[11]

China edit

China has specific rules differentiating an EPZ from a FTZ. For example, 70% of goods in EPZs must be exported, but there is no such quota for FTZs.[13]

Background edit

The world's first-documented free-trade zone was established on the Greek Island of Delos in 166 BCE. It lasted until about 69 BCE when the island was overrun by pirates. The Romans had many civitas libera, or free cities, some of which could coin money, establish their own laws, and not pay an annual tribute to the Roman Emperor. These continued through at least the first millennium CE. In the 12th century, the Hanseatic League began operating in Northern Europe and established trading colonies throughout Europe. These Free Trade Zones included Hamburg and the Steelyard in London. The Steelyard, like other Hansa stations, was a separate walled community with its own warehouses, weighing house, chapel, counting houses, and residential quarters. In 1988, remains of the former Hanseatic trading house, once the largest medieval trading complex in Britain, were uncovered by archaeologists during maintenance work on Cannon Street Station. Shannon, Ireland (Shannon Free Zone),[14] established in 1959, has claimed to be the first "modern" free trade zone. The Shannon Zone was started to help the city airport adjust to a radical change in aircraft technology that permitted longer range aircraft to skip previously-required refueling stops in Shannon. It was an attempt by the Irish government to maintain employment around the airport so that the airport would continue to generate revenue for the Irish economy. It was hugely successful and is still in operation today. Other free zones to note are the Kandla Free Zone in India, which started in about 1960, and the Kaohsiung Export Processing Zone in Taiwan, which started in 1967. The number of worldwide free-trade zones proliferated in the late 20th century.

Corporations setting up in a zone may be given a number of regulatory and fiscal incentives, such as the right to establish a business, the right to import parts and equipment without duty, the right to keep and use foreign exchange earnings, and sometimes income or property tax breaks. There may also be other incentives relating the methods of customs control and filing requirements. The rationale is that the zones will attract investment, create employment, and thus reduce poverty and unemployment, stimulating the area's economy. These zones are often used by multinational corporations to set up factories to produce goods (such as clothing, shoes, and electronics).

Free-trade zones should be distinguished from free trade areas. A free trade zone is normally established in a single country, although there are a few exceptions where a free zone may cross a national border, such as the Syrian/Jordanian Free Trade Zone.[15] Free trade areas are set up between countries; for example, the Latin America Free Trade Association (LAFTA) was created in the 1960 Treaty of Montevideo by Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay; and the North American Free Trade Agreement was established between Mexico, the United States, and Canada. In free trade areas, tariffs are only lowered between member countries. They should also be distinguished from customs unions, like the former European Economic Community, where several countries agree to unify customs regulations and eliminate customs between the union members.

Free-trade zones have more recently been also called special economic zones in some countries. Special economic zones (SEZs) have been established in many countries as testing grounds for the implementation of liberal market economy principles. SEZs are viewed as instruments to enhance the acceptability and the credibility of the transformation policies and to attract domestic and foreign investment. The change in terminology has been driven by the formation of the World Trade Organization (WTO), which prohibits members from offering certain types of fiscal incentives to promote the exports of goods, thus why the term Export Processing Zone (EPZ) is no longer used with newer zones. For example, India converted all of its EPZs to SEZs in 2000.

In 1999, there were 43 million people working in about 3,000 FTZs spanning 116 countries and producing clothes, shoes, sneakers, electronics, and toys. The basic objectives of economic zones are to enhance foreign exchange earnings, develop export-oriented industries, and generate employment opportunities.

US Foreign-Trade Zones Board edit

In the United States, the Foreign-Trade Zones Board (FTZB), established under the Foreign-Trade Zones (FTZ) Act of 1934, is led by the Secretary of Commerce and the Secretary of the Treasury.

In January 2009, the Foreign-Trade Zones Board adopted an FTZ Board staff proposal to make what it called the Alternative Site Framework (ASF) as a means of designating and managing general-purpose FTZ sites through reorganization. The ASF provides Foreign-Trade Zone grantees greater flexibility to meet specific requests for zone status by utilizing the minor boundary modification process. The theory of the ASF is that by more closely linking the amount of FTZ-designated space to the amount of space activated with Customs and Border Protection, Zone users would have better and quicker access to benefits.

When an FTZ grantee evaluates whether or not to expand its FTZ project in order to improve the ease in which the Zone may be utilized by existing companies, as well as how it attracts new prospective companies, the Alternative Site Framework (ASF) should be considered. The ASF may be an appropriate option for certain Foreign-Trade Zone projects, but the decision of whether to adopt the new framework and what the configuration of the sites should be requires careful analysis and planning. Regardless of the choice to expand the FTZ project, the sites should be selected and the application drafted in such a manner as to receive swift approval while maximizing benefit to those that locate in the Zone. Successful zone projects are generally the result of a plan developed and implemented by individuals who understand all aspects of the FTZ program.[16]

The FTZB approves the reorganization of Foreign Trade Zone (FTZ) 32 under the alternative site framework. The application submitted by its grantee, the Greater Miami Foreign Trade Zone was approved and officially ordered by the FTZB on January 8, 2013. From California to Oklahoma, North Carolina, and New York State, FTZs all across the United States have recently[when?] been making use of the flexible opportunities offered by the Alternative Site Framework (ASF) program. The ASF program is designed to serve zone projects that want the flexibility to both attract users/operators to certain fixed sites but also want the ability to serve companies at other locations where the demand for FTZ services will arise in the future. FTZ 32 was founded in 1979 and processes over $1 billion in goods with products from more than 65 countries and exported to more than 75 countries worldwide with speed and efficiency. According to the official order from the FTZB, FTZ 32 existing site 1, Miami Free Zone, will be classified as a magnet site.[17]

UAE Free Zones edit

Due to growing business opportunities in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the UAE government has introduced 'Free Zones' to make it easier for foreigners to invest and operate in the UAE. In these Free Zones, investors benefit from maintaining full business ownership and receiving tax exemptions.

Some of the benefits of setting up business in UAE Free Zones are:

  • No Corporate Tax, 100% exemption[18] provided that business done between the free zone company and any mainland companies are under 375,000 AED a year.[19]
  • 100% ownership of business
  • Bank accounts can be opened in a business's name
  • Reasonable renewal fees
  • 100% import and export tax exemptions
  • 100% repatriation of profits and capital
  • Investor VISA
  • Ajman Free Zone
  • Ras Al Khaimah Economic Zone (RAKEZ)
  • International Free Zone Authority (IFZA)
  • Sharjah Media City Free Zone (SHAMS)
  • Hamriyah-Free Zone

Kuwait Free Trade Zone edit

Kuwait's free trade zone (FTZ) was formally established in 1999 to expand businesses and lure the export industry. The zone was located in the western part of the commercial port of Shuwaikh. It was the only free trade zone in the country.

In 2019, the Council of Ministers cancelled the free-zone, leaving Kuwait without a special economic zone.[20]

Strategic benefits edit

Aberdeen Group research published in 2013 noted that best-in-class companies make strategic use of free-trade zones as a means of reducing inbound trade costs, shortening import timescales, and optimising the balance of their corporate sourcing and operational activities.[21]

Criticism edit

Sometimes the domestic government pays part of the initial cost of factory setup, loosens environmental protections and rules regarding negligence and the treatment of workers, and promises not to ask payment of taxes for the next few years. When the taxation-free years are over, the corporation that set up the factory without fully assuming its costs is often able to set up operations elsewhere for less expense than the taxes to be paid, giving it leverage to take the host government to the bargaining table with more demands, but parent companies in the United States are rarely held accountable.[22]

Political writer Naomi Klein has also criticized the transient nature of FTZs, noting the factory closures connected to the 1997 Asian financial crisis. She criticized the low wages and long hours, citing workdays of twelve or more hours in Indonesia, Philippines, Southern China, and Sri Lanka circa 2000.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ УПРАВЛЕНИЕ ОСОБЫМИ ЭКОНОМИЧЕСКИМИ ЗОНАМИ СУБЪЕКТА РФ Масаев С.Н. В сборнике: XIII Всероссийское совещание по проблемам управления ВСПУ-2019 Труды. Под общей редакцией Д.А. Новикова. 2019. С. 1773-1778.
  2. ^ Masaev S. Destruction of the Resident Enterprise in the Special Economic Zone with Sanctions. Publisher: IEEE. 2019
  3. ^ "Free-trade zone", Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  4. ^ "Zone Definition", Special Economic Zone: Performance, Lessons Learned, and Implication for Zone Development, Washington DC: World Bank, 2008, pp. 9–11
  5. ^ a b Tiefenbrun, Susan (2012), Tax Free Trade Zones Of The World And In The United States, Edward Elgar Publishing, ISBN 978-1-84980-243-7
  6. ^ "Special Economic Zone (SEZ): Chinese Economics", Encyclopædia Britannica, retrieved September 16, 2016
  7. ^ Farole, Akinci, ed., "Special Economic Zones: Progress, Challenges and Future Directions, World Bank, 2011
  8. ^ Export Processing Zones (PDF), Policy and Research Series, Washington DC: World Bank, 1992
  9. ^ a b Sargent, John; Matthews, Linda. (PDF). University of Texas Pan America. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-07-16. Retrieved 2009-11-11.
  10. ^ "Zonas de Processamento de Exportação". Ministério da Economia INDÚSTRIA, COMÉRCIO EXTERIOR E SERVIÇOS. Retrieved 2020-02-28.
  11. ^ a b c de Souza Feitosa, Roberto (2016-02-18). "The Free Trade Zones in Brazil". Tax & Accounting Blog Posts by Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 2020-02-28.
  12. ^ "Export Processing Zones (EPZ)". Ministério da Economia INDÚSTRIA, COMÉRCIO EXTERIOR E SERVIÇOS. Retrieved 2020-02-28.
  13. ^ "Compare". Yusen Logistics Co., Ltd. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-05-11. Retrieved 2010-11-11.
  15. ^ "Syria, Jordan open a free trade zone". Hürriyet Daily News. Retrieved 2017-01-06.
  16. ^ "Foreign-Trade Zone Alternative Site Framework (ASF)". Foreign Trade Zone Corporation. Retrieved April 1, 2013.
  17. ^ "81b. Establishment of zones". Retrieved 10 April 2013.
  18. ^ "Corporate tax (CT) - the Official Portal of the UAE Government".
  19. ^ "The UAE introduces its first-ever corporate taxes, set to start in 2023". CNBC.
  20. ^ "Kuwait's government cancels adopted Free Trade Zone decision". Zawya.
  21. ^ "Supply Chain Digest - The best in supply chain management and logistics news, insight, education, opinion and education". www.scdigest.com. Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  22. ^ Millen, Joyce; Holtz, Timothy (2007). "Dying for Growth", in The Politics of Globalization: A Reader at Google Books, ed. Mark Kesselman. Houghton Mifflin.
  23. ^ Klein, Naomi (2000). No Logo. Flamingo. pp. 204–229.

External links edit

  • Hualingfiz.ge Free Industrial Zone

free, trade, zone, this, article, about, special, economic, zones, within, countries, other, uses, free, zone, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, been, suggested, that, free, economic, zone, merged, into, this, article, discuss, proposed, since, 202. This article is about the special economic zones within countries For other uses see Free Zone FTZ redirects here For other uses see FTZ disambiguation It has been suggested that Free economic zone be merged into this article Discuss Proposed since May 2023 A free trade zone FTZ is a class of special economic zone 1 2 It is a geographic area where goods may be imported stored handled manufactured or reconfigured and re exported under specific customs regulation and generally not subject to customs duty Free trade zones are generally organized around major seaports international airports and national frontiers areas with many geographic advantages for trade 3 Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Synonyms 2 Export processing zone 2 1 Brazil 2 2 China 3 Background 4 US Foreign Trade Zones Board 5 UAE Free Zones 6 Kuwait Free Trade Zone 7 Strategic benefits 8 Criticism 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksDefinition editThe World Bank defines free trade zones as small fenced in duty free areas offering warehousing storage and distribution facilities for trade transshipment and re export operations 4 Free trade zones can also be defined as labor intensive manufacturing centers that involve the import of raw materials or components and the export of factory products but this is a dated definition as more and more free trade zones focus on service industries such as software back office operations research and financial services Synonyms edit Free trade zones are referred to as foreign trade zones in the United States Foreign Trade Zones Act of 1934 5 where FTZs provide customs related advantages as well as exemptions from state and local inventory taxes In other countries they have been called duty free export processing zones export free zones export processing zones free export zones free zones industrial free zones investment promotion zones maquiladoras and special economic zones 5 6 Some were previously called free ports Free zones range from specific purpose manufacturing facilities to areas where legal systems and economic regulation vary from the normal provisions of the country concerned Free zones may reduce taxes customs duties and regulatory requirements for registration of business Zones around the world often provide special exemptions from normal immigration procedures and foreign investment restrictions as well as other features Free zones are intended to foster economic activity and employment that could occur elsewhere 7 Export processing zone editAn export processing zone EPZ is a specific type of FTZ usually set up in developing countries by their governments to promote industrial and commercial exports According to the World Bank an export processing zone is an industrial estate usually a fenced in area of 10 to 300 hectares that specializes in manufacturing for export It offers firms free trade conditions and a liberal regulatory environment Its objectives are to attract foreign investors collaborators and buyers who can facilitate entry into the world market for some of the economy s industrial goods thus generating employment and foreign exchange 8 Most FTZs are located in developing countries Brazil Colombia India Indonesia El Salvador China the Philippines Malaysia Bangladesh Nigeria Pakistan Mexico the Dominican Republic Costa Rica Honduras Guatemala Kenya Sri Lanka Mauritius and Madagascar all have EPZ programs 9 In 1997 93 countries had set up export processing zones employing 22 5 million people and five years later in 2003 EPZs in 116 countries employed 43 million people 9 Brazil edit In Brazil 25 Export Processing Zones have been authorized in 17 states and 19 of them have been implemented 10 Brazilian government launched the first Export processing zones in 1988 aiming to fight the unbalances in the country 11 First EPZ area in operation was located near of the Port of Pecem in Ceara 11 Companies in these areas are benefited from tax exemptions and incentives at the ICMS Tax State Value Added Tax Some Brazilian states offer other regional incentives 12 Companies also can take advantage of a Foreign exchange treatment supported by the law that created the EPZ and proximity of Custom authorities with offices inside the EPZ 11 China edit China has specific rules differentiating an EPZ from a FTZ For example 70 of goods in EPZs must be exported but there is no such quota for FTZs 13 Background editThe world s first documented free trade zone was established on the Greek Island of Delos in 166 BCE It lasted until about 69 BCE when the island was overrun by pirates The Romans had many civitas libera or free cities some of which could coin money establish their own laws and not pay an annual tribute to the Roman Emperor These continued through at least the first millennium CE In the 12th century the Hanseatic League began operating in Northern Europe and established trading colonies throughout Europe These Free Trade Zones included Hamburg and the Steelyard in London The Steelyard like other Hansa stations was a separate walled community with its own warehouses weighing house chapel counting houses and residential quarters In 1988 remains of the former Hanseatic trading house once the largest medieval trading complex in Britain were uncovered by archaeologists during maintenance work on Cannon Street Station Shannon Ireland Shannon Free Zone 14 established in 1959 has claimed to be the first modern free trade zone The Shannon Zone was started to help the city airport adjust to a radical change in aircraft technology that permitted longer range aircraft to skip previously required refueling stops in Shannon It was an attempt by the Irish government to maintain employment around the airport so that the airport would continue to generate revenue for the Irish economy It was hugely successful and is still in operation today Other free zones to note are the Kandla Free Zone in India which started in about 1960 and the Kaohsiung Export Processing Zone in Taiwan which started in 1967 The number of worldwide free trade zones proliferated in the late 20th century Corporations setting up in a zone may be given a number of regulatory and fiscal incentives such as the right to establish a business the right to import parts and equipment without duty the right to keep and use foreign exchange earnings and sometimes income or property tax breaks There may also be other incentives relating the methods of customs control and filing requirements The rationale is that the zones will attract investment create employment and thus reduce poverty and unemployment stimulating the area s economy These zones are often used by multinational corporations to set up factories to produce goods such as clothing shoes and electronics Free trade zones should be distinguished from free trade areas A free trade zone is normally established in a single country although there are a few exceptions where a free zone may cross a national border such as the Syrian Jordanian Free Trade Zone 15 Free trade areas are set up between countries for example the Latin America Free Trade Association LAFTA was created in the 1960 Treaty of Montevideo by Argentina Brazil Chile Mexico Paraguay Peru and Uruguay and the North American Free Trade Agreement was established between Mexico the United States and Canada In free trade areas tariffs are only lowered between member countries They should also be distinguished from customs unions like the former European Economic Community where several countries agree to unify customs regulations and eliminate customs between the union members Free trade zones have more recently been also called special economic zones in some countries Special economic zones SEZs have been established in many countries as testing grounds for the implementation of liberal market economy principles SEZs are viewed as instruments to enhance the acceptability and the credibility of the transformation policies and to attract domestic and foreign investment The change in terminology has been driven by the formation of the World Trade Organization WTO which prohibits members from offering certain types of fiscal incentives to promote the exports of goods thus why the term Export Processing Zone EPZ is no longer used with newer zones For example India converted all of its EPZs to SEZs in 2000 In 1999 there were 43 million people working in about 3 000 FTZs spanning 116 countries and producing clothes shoes sneakers electronics and toys The basic objectives of economic zones are to enhance foreign exchange earnings develop export oriented industries and generate employment opportunities US Foreign Trade Zones Board editIn the United States the Foreign Trade Zones Board FTZB established under the Foreign Trade Zones FTZ Act of 1934 is led by the Secretary of Commerce and the Secretary of the Treasury In January 2009 the Foreign Trade Zones Board adopted an FTZ Board staff proposal to make what it called the Alternative Site Framework ASF as a means of designating and managing general purpose FTZ sites through reorganization The ASF provides Foreign Trade Zone grantees greater flexibility to meet specific requests for zone status by utilizing the minor boundary modification process The theory of the ASF is that by more closely linking the amount of FTZ designated space to the amount of space activated with Customs and Border Protection Zone users would have better and quicker access to benefits When an FTZ grantee evaluates whether or not to expand its FTZ project in order to improve the ease in which the Zone may be utilized by existing companies as well as how it attracts new prospective companies the Alternative Site Framework ASF should be considered The ASF may be an appropriate option for certain Foreign Trade Zone projects but the decision of whether to adopt the new framework and what the configuration of the sites should be requires careful analysis and planning Regardless of the choice to expand the FTZ project the sites should be selected and the application drafted in such a manner as to receive swift approval while maximizing benefit to those that locate in the Zone Successful zone projects are generally the result of a plan developed and implemented by individuals who understand all aspects of the FTZ program 16 The FTZB approves the reorganization of Foreign Trade Zone FTZ 32 under the alternative site framework The application submitted by its grantee the Greater Miami Foreign Trade Zone was approved and officially ordered by the FTZB on January 8 2013 From California to Oklahoma North Carolina and New York State FTZs all across the United States have recently when been making use of the flexible opportunities offered by the Alternative Site Framework ASF program The ASF program is designed to serve zone projects that want the flexibility to both attract users operators to certain fixed sites but also want the ability to serve companies at other locations where the demand for FTZ services will arise in the future FTZ 32 was founded in 1979 and processes over 1 billion in goods with products from more than 65 countries and exported to more than 75 countries worldwide with speed and efficiency According to the official order from the FTZB FTZ 32 existing site 1 Miami Free Zone will be classified as a magnet site 17 UAE Free Zones editDue to growing business opportunities in the United Arab Emirates UAE the UAE government has introduced Free Zones to make it easier for foreigners to invest and operate in the UAE In these Free Zones investors benefit from maintaining full business ownership and receiving tax exemptions Some of the benefits of setting up business in UAE Free Zones are No Corporate Tax 100 exemption 18 provided that business done between the free zone company and any mainland companies are under 375 000 AED a year 19 100 ownership of business Bank accounts can be opened in a business s name Reasonable renewal fees 100 import and export tax exemptions 100 repatriation of profits and capital Investor VISA Ajman Free Zone Ras Al Khaimah Economic Zone RAKEZ International Free Zone Authority IFZA Sharjah Media City Free Zone SHAMS Hamriyah Free ZoneKuwait Free Trade Zone editKuwait s free trade zone FTZ was formally established in 1999 to expand businesses and lure the export industry The zone was located in the western part of the commercial port of Shuwaikh It was the only free trade zone in the country In 2019 the Council of Ministers cancelled the free zone leaving Kuwait without a special economic zone 20 Strategic benefits editAberdeen Group research published in 2013 noted that best in class companies make strategic use of free trade zones as a means of reducing inbound trade costs shortening import timescales and optimising the balance of their corporate sourcing and operational activities 21 Criticism editSometimes the domestic government pays part of the initial cost of factory setup loosens environmental protections and rules regarding negligence and the treatment of workers and promises not to ask payment of taxes for the next few years When the taxation free years are over the corporation that set up the factory without fully assuming its costs is often able to set up operations elsewhere for less expense than the taxes to be paid giving it leverage to take the host government to the bargaining table with more demands but parent companies in the United States are rarely held accountable 22 Political writer Naomi Klein has also criticized the transient nature of FTZs noting the factory closures connected to the 1997 Asian financial crisis She criticized the low wages and long hours citing workdays of twelve or more hours in Indonesia Philippines Southern China and Sri Lanka circa 2000 23 See also editAggressive legalism Bonded logistics park Foreign trade zones of the United States Free trade areas in Europe Free economic zone Free trade area Free trade Index of international trade topics List of free trade zones List of free trade zones in Dubai Shanghai Free Trade Zone Special economic zone Factory trading post References edit UPRAVLENIE OSOBYMI EKONOMIChESKIMI ZONAMI SUBEKTA RF Masaev S N V sbornike XIII Vserossijskoe soveshanie po problemam upravleniya VSPU 2019 Trudy Pod obshej redakciej D A Novikova 2019 S 1773 1778 Masaev S Destruction of the Resident Enterprise in the Special Economic Zone with Sanctions Publisher IEEE 2019 Free trade zone Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 28 August 2016 Zone Definition Special Economic Zone Performance Lessons Learned and Implication for Zone Development Washington DC World Bank 2008 pp 9 11 a b Tiefenbrun Susan 2012 Tax Free Trade Zones Of The World And In The United States Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 978 1 84980 243 7 Special Economic Zone SEZ Chinese Economics Encyclopaedia Britannica retrieved September 16 2016 Farole Akinci ed Special Economic Zones Progress Challenges and Future Directions World Bank 2011 Export Processing Zones PDF Policy and Research Series Washington DC World Bank 1992 a b Sargent John Matthews Linda China vs Mexico in the Global EPZ Industry Maquiladoras FDI Quality and Plant Mortality PDF University of Texas Pan America Archived from the original PDF on 2010 07 16 Retrieved 2009 11 11 Zonas de Processamento de Exportacao Ministerio da Economia INDUSTRIA COMERCIO EXTERIOR E SERVICOS Retrieved 2020 02 28 a b c de Souza Feitosa Roberto 2016 02 18 The Free Trade Zones in Brazil Tax amp Accounting Blog Posts by Thomson Reuters Retrieved 2020 02 28 Export Processing Zones EPZ Ministerio da Economia INDUSTRIA COMERCIO EXTERIOR E SERVICOS Retrieved 2020 02 28 Compare Yusen Logistics Co Ltd Retrieved 9 May 2014 Welcome to Shannon Development Archived from the original on 2011 05 11 Retrieved 2010 11 11 Syria Jordan open a free trade zone Hurriyet Daily News Retrieved 2017 01 06 Foreign Trade Zone Alternative Site Framework ASF Foreign Trade Zone Corporation Retrieved April 1 2013 81b Establishment of zones Retrieved 10 April 2013 Corporate tax CT the Official Portal of the UAE Government The UAE introduces its first ever corporate taxes set to start in 2023 CNBC Kuwait s government cancels adopted Free Trade Zone decision Zawya Supply Chain Digest The best in supply chain management and logistics news insight education opinion and education www scdigest com Retrieved 2023 10 31 Millen Joyce Holtz Timothy 2007 Dying for Growth in The Politics of Globalization A Reader at Google Books ed Mark Kesselman Houghton Mifflin Klein Naomi 2000 No Logo Flamingo pp 204 229 External links editHualingfiz ge Free Industrial Zone Portal nbsp Business and economics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Free trade zone amp oldid 1182840436, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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